Reading the Defense: Linebacker Tiers (Post-OTA Update)

Jene Bramel's Reading the Defense: Linebacker Tiers (Post-OTA Update) Jene Bramel Published 07/05/2014

WHY TIERS?

Rank lists and cheatsheets can be deceiving when they're presented without commentary. Our rankings have been vastly improved by adding staffer comments, but it's hard to see context in the consensus rankings and sheets. It's important to know where a significant drop-off in fantasy value occurs. A simple rank list can't tell you if the DL4 is closer in value to the DL10 than the DL3. A cheatsheet can't tell you if the ranker feels the LB10 is a boom-bust play with LB2 upside and LB40 downside while the LB11 has a much narrower range of expectation.

That's where tiers are helpful.

Using tiers -- with or without commentary -- allows you to lump and split players in context. Using tiers can help keep you on the right side of draft runs. Seeing that you have five linebackers on your board might prompt you to take a player at another position. Noting that there's only one wide receiver left before a major drop in value will show you when you must draft a position sooner than expected. A tiered draft board keeps you from making panicked decisions while on the clock.

These tiers are based on 2014 expectation only and I'm basing positional classifications on the MFL database (which syncs to the Rotoworld depth charts later in the offseason). I will include a separate dynasty stash tier at the end of each positional article.

(The date on this article represents the last time the tiers were updated. Make sure you are viewing the most recent tier article by checking the complete IDP article list here.)

THIS IS THE POST-minicamp and OTA UPDATE (early july)

We are now through the minicamp season and have seen each team's depth chart for the first time. There's still much left to learn, however, as some veteran players sat out OTAs with injuries. We've also seen the first iteration of changes to positional classifications at MFL. There's some inertia in those first movements, but not all of them should be considered set in stone.

Minicamps depth charts and reports shuffled a few players among these tiers, but the first days of training camp will answer the pressing questions that are keeping the tier jumper and watch list groups so deep. 

I've added a new column to the tables to address trends inside and throughout the tiers. I'll add a ^^^^ for those players making a move up in my tiers and vvvv for those players who have dropped since the previous tier release (June 1). For reference, I'm going to preserve the earlier versions of these tier articles, but the trend column should help you see where player movement is happening within the tiers at a quick glance. 

In this post-minicamp set of tier articles, I'm also adding an ADP column. The ADP number (snapshot taken on July 5) will be an average of our FBG rankings, the FantasyPros Consensus Rankings and ADP data from recent drafts at MFL. If a player does not have an ADP in his column, it means he wasn't ranked in the top 60 in at least two of the three consensus rank lists.

TIER 1 | ELITE LB1

Barring some positive signs in the very deep tier jumper category below, this won't be a season to slough this tier and look for safe value later. You'll need at least one of this tier on your roster this year to avoid what could be a frustrating season of chasing matchups and worrying over snap counts for the players in the middle ranks. We've already lost three consensus elite backers to injury or suspension (Sean Lee, Kiko Alonso, Daryl Washington). Riskier names are moving into the lower tiers on numbers alone -- someone has to finish in the LB2 ranks -- but the pool of true every-down strong fantasy options has already weakened. You'll be wise not to let this tier pass you by in favor of deeper WR and RB rosters this summer.

Luke Kuechly <> LB1 May not finish as overall LB1, but arguably still safest target on your draft board
Lavonte David <> LB2 New scheme is perfect fit, but not much room to improve from last year's solo and big plays
Vontaze Burfict <> LB3 Depth chart in Cincinnati still full of role players, stat crew no longer a concern
Paul Posluszny <> LB4 Though not elite talent, opportunity and surrounding cast make him near lock for 100 solos
Patrick Willis <> LB5 Still a stud, Bowman likely to miss 1/2 season, could be #1 overall fantasy LB again
Jerod Mayo <> LB11 Favorable home stat crew, marginal surrounding cast, don't underrate him
Derrick Johnson <> LB7 Steady, big-play capable, KC still hasn't paired him with another talented ILB
Karlos Dansby <> LB8 Huge 2013 and momentum should follow him to great situation in Cleveland
Paul Worrilow ^^^^ LB14 Play didn't match numbers last year, but will improve has no competition for tackles

TIER 1A | ELITE LB1 UPSIDE

There's an argument to jump these three names up into the elite tier group due to their high floor and scrap this hedge tier altogether. But I'm hopeful that camp elevates a few additional names into this tier by early August.

James Laurinaitis <> LB9 Gregg Williams as DC could improve big play stats, presence of Ogletree limits ceiling
Bobby Wagner <> LB6 Home stat crew depresses solo tackle numbers, strong defense limits tackle opportunity
Wesley Woodyard ^^^^ LB31 Locked in at WILB, durability concern holding him out of elite tier

TIER 2A | RISK-REWARD LB2

Here's why you'll want to attack the elite tiers this year. The floor of this group is riskier than usual. Some will establish themselves as stronger options than others during preseason games, but -- for now -- this isn't a tier that screams value. Also, remember, in a straight rank list the names in this tier will be intermixed with the other Tier 2 players. I'll keep my "rankings-only" list current here so you can see how the tiers mix during camp.

Alec Ogletree <> LB10 Instincts questionable but athleticism more than make up for it, near elite option
Lawrence Timmons <> LB18 High ceiling earns him slot here rather than High Floor LB2 tier, narrowly misses Tier 1A 
Brian Cushing <> LB16 Fragile but enters offseason healthy, has good big play value, little competition for tackles 
Danny Trevathan <> LB12 May be lone every-down LB in Denver, was productive when Woodyard out last year 
Jamie Collins ^^^^ LB40 Versatile enough to play inside or outside, OTA evidence suggests full time role 
D'Qwell Jackson <> LB26 Assist-happy stat crew hurts solo tackle upside, must compete with Freeman for chances 

TIER 2B | HIGH FLOOR LB2

This group is also riskier than usual. Generally, I use this tier to list players I'd be comfortable using as my LB2 every week in a pinch and would be very happy running out as an every-week LB3 starter in balanced scoring systems. Each of these players put up solid numbers and will be in similar situations this year. But there's an argument that every player on this list will struggle to reach last year's numbers or will have more weekly variance than expected.

Daryl Smith <> LB27 Goofy stat line last year (57-66, 5 sacks, 18 PD), hard to project elite ceiling here
Perry Riley <> LB19 Could slot in risk-reward tier, but think high floor is better bet than elite ceiling
DeMeco Ryans <> LB24 Quietly top ten fantasy option last year with strong solos and good peripherals
Stephen Tulloch <> LB25 Scheme independent high floor fantasy option, should be dependable every-week play
Chad Greenway <> LB15 Zimmer scheme a positive, but 90 solos may be a tough ask
Curtis Lofton <> LB29 Steady production last year, will be every-down player again with consistent opportunity
Thomas Davis <> LB32 Stellar talent, upside blunted due to Kuechly's fundamental play between the tackles
Jerrell Freeman <> LB17 May be underrating him, but stiffer competition for tackles this year, stat crew an issue
Nick Roach <> LB36 Expected more solos last year, OAK much more athletic outside, ceiling questionable

TIER 2C | RUSH / BIG PLAY LB2

I wish this tier was a little deeper, because I'd advocate looking here if you aren't excited about the non-rush prospects. If you're going to use a high variance option in balanced scoring systems, you may as well go all or nothing.

Terrell Suggs <> LB63 Wasn't limited by Achilles last year, still putting up 50-10 seasons
Justin Houston <> LB34 Would have been T10 in balanced scoring in 2014 if it weren't for elbow dislocation
Von Miller <> LB22 Will drop if not ready in camp, but late spring reports looked positive
Robert Mathis <> LB57 Suspended for first four games, will be top tier big play threat when returns
Khalil Mack <> LB37 Base SLB / nickel edge rusher with Von Miller upside, capable of 60-10

TIER 3A | UPSIDE LB3

I'd like this group better were I convinced of an elite ceiling for Te'o or Minter and Kendricks had shown more consistency to date. I think this tier will see the most turnover -- players moving up, players moving out, players moving in from the watch list -- than any other in the coming weeks.

NaVorro Bowman <> LB21 Likely to start season on PUP, target as depth only, could have upside in fantasy playoffs
C.J. Mosley ^^^^ LB35 OTA work suggests he'll have chance to play every down immediately
Mychal Kendricks <> LB13 Ryans' rebound limited numbers last year, has upside but not ready to bump him to LB2 tier
Kevin Minter <> LB28 Unproven, but has huge opportunity with Washington suspended, Mathieu injured
Joplo Bartu ^^^^ LB59 Likely to start in Weatherspoon's SILB role and play every-down, high variance play
Ryan Shazier ^^^^ LB33 Warming to his fit in 3-4, already working with starters in OTAs
Sio Moore ^^^^ LB54 Was first team WLB in minicamp, possible every-down opportunity
Manti Te'o <> LB50 Should get chance to play in nickel this year, lack of range hurts ceiling
Telvin Smith Sr <> LB67 Perfect fit in Jacksonville, will produce if can hold up physicially
Brad Jones <> LB53 Packers didn't add ILB in draft, value dependent on subpackage role
Mason Foster <> LB41 Moves up significantly if Lovie Smith sees him as every-down option
Christian Kirksey <> LB71 Fit questionable but Pettine sees upside, may be every-down player immediately
Jacquian Williams ^^^^ LB75 Won WLB job in OTAs, expected to play in subs, durability questions

TIER 3B | HIGH FLOOR LB3

If you decide you'd rather not mess with risky players from the middle tiers, the top half of this tier are solid LB3s you can rely on if you heavily target the elite DE and safety tiers instead.

Donald Butler <> LB23 Inconsistency and durability are concerns, high floor option with upside when healthy
Larry Foote ^^^^ LB66 Likely to stick as every-down ILB in Arizona, upside may be limited next to Minter
David Harris <> LB48 Strong between tackles, not rangy enough to be elite fantasy option
Lance Briggs <> LB38 Off to good start last season, questionable surrounding cast, may be underrating him here
Koa Misi ^^^^ LB55 Looks entrenched at MLB with indications he'll be every-down player
DeAndre Levy <> LB30 Unlikely to repeat 2013 tackle numbers, change in scheme won't boost stats
Michael Wilhoite ^^^^ LB84 Running with first team in OTAs, trusted by SF after solid fill-in duty last year
Jon Beason vvvv LB39 Suffered another serious foot injury in OTAs, will miss regular season time
A.J. Hawk <> LB46 Just enough production to roster as bye week / injury replacement depth

MATCHUP RUSH LB

There are some intriguing names here and lots of suitable flyers for those in big play heavy scoring systems. Orakpo, in particular, might move into the LB2 tier if I can convince myself that his ceiling is easily reachable.

Aldon Smith <> LB47 May be short suspension, will move up to Rush LB2 tier if less than four games
Tamba Hali <> LB60 Always lock for 40-10 floor, solid LB2 in big play systems
Brian Orakpo <> LB72 Rumors of more aggressive rush scheme, on franchise tag, set up for big year
Clay Matthews <> LB62 Not enough tackles to rank higher, durability concern
Junior Galette <> LB88 Needs work against run to be every-week option, pass rush was there in full time duty
Barkevious Mingo <> LB90 Either dominant or dominated last year, development will skey ratio toward dominant soon
Ryan Kerrigan <> LB76 High floor with questionable ceiling, may be underrating him a few slots here
Jadeveon Clowney <> LB42 Elite talent in great situation opposite Watt, tackle stats limiting factor
Elvis Dumervil <> LB86 Big pass rush numbers, non-existent tackle numbers due to role
Melvin Ingram III <> LB94 Talented enough to be next Robert Mathis, injuries have slowed development
Quinton Coples <>   Better against run than expected, pass rush upside major question
Whitney Mercilus <> LB92 Started strong last year, slowed after teams adjusted, upside alongside Watt/Clowney
John Abraham <>   Pressure numbers still strong, boom-bust matchup option

tier jumpers | REDRAFT WATCH LIST

Moreso than ever, the league is trending toward platoons and rotations, limiting the tackle upside of many once-viable schemes and roles. We're now through the draft and OTAs and minicamps and many situations around the league remain unsettled. This group is now 30 players deep. That's a truckload of players that will either be slotted in the tier above next month or be deleted altogether.

The preseason will put at least a few into fantasy friendly situations. The top third of this group are rosterable as high upside flyers now. The last few names here are listed above the dynasty stash list only because they may have an easier road to playing time. They are rosterable in only the deepest leagues for now.

Zach Brown <> LB45 Concerning that Titans' beat writers still weren't confirming Brown as starter after OTAs 
Preston Brown ^^^^   Likely to get first crack at WLB with Alonso out for the year, may be every-down player 
Brandon Spikes ^^^^ LB44 One year MLB rental, could play every down with favorable stat crew, durability questions 
Justin Durant ^^^^ LB77  If healthy and still running with first team at MLB in camp, will move up
Audie Cole <> LB51 Jasper Brinkley still seeing base defensive snaps in minicamp workouts 
Brooks Reed <> LB91 Addition of Clowney moves Reed inside full time, may compete with Dent 
Keenan Robinson <> LB70 Working with first team at ILB in OTAs, could be major find if stays healthy 
Dannell Ellerbe <> LB58 Brutal in run defense last year, moving outside with Misi in middle now 
Dont'a Hightower <> LB61 Deserves observation but Mayo and Collins look like every-down starters 
Demario Davis <> LB49 Disappointing stats and hasn't fully developed, but will get snaps again this year 
Rolando McClain ^^^^   Retired twice already but open opporutnity in Dallas depth chart, base player only
Kyle Van Noy <> LB95 Could be base WLB and nickel pass rusher on stud defensive line 
Nate Irving ^^^^ LB93 Reportedly earned MLB job in OTAs, not guaranteed to play every down 
Emmanuel Lamur ^^^^ LB82 Getting another long look as versatile every-down SLB in Cincinnati 
D.J. Williams <> LB56 Lost reps to Jon Bostic during OTAs, wide open competition 
Bruce Carter <> LB43 Called out by Marinelli for inconsistent 2013 play, role not assured
Jelani Jenkins <>   Arguably strongest WLB option on depth chart, outside chance at base defensive job 
Anthony Barr <> LB85 Another 4-3 OLB / nickel rusher prospect with upside 
Jon Bostic <>  LB69 High speed score does not a MLB make, role and snap count still unknown 
Kevin Burnett vvvv LB64 Demoted to second team behind Sio Moore during OTAs 
Prince Shembo ^^^^   Needs to be on watch list, but fit and ILB instincts are questionable 
Jonathan Vilma ^^^^   Name continues to be brought up as FA option, unlikely to find fantasy relevant role 
Corey Lemonier <>   Could see high leverage rotational role, upside tied to Smith's suspension length 
Jameel McClain ^^^^   To fill in at MLB while Beason recovers, underwhelming option without long term future 
Jasper Brinkley ^^^^   May not stick at MLB, will not play every down if does 
Devonte Holloman vvvv LB80 Struggled last season, Dallas doesn't see him as short term MLB option 
Vincent Rey vvvv LB52 Longshot, team seems to still prefer Maualuga, healthy Lamur hurts upside 
Akeem Dent ^^^^   Now in Houston, could see rotational role (or more) if Reed struggles at ILB 
Ernie Sims ^^^^   Obligated to list him given Arizona depth chart woes, but nothing to see here 
LaRoy Reynolds <>   May see OLB snaps, but upside dashed with addition of Telvin Smith Sr 

DYNASTY STASH

Players listed here are either young vets buried on the depth chart or recently drafted prospects with some long term potential. Or they are named Brandon Graham. If you thought I'd be taking Graham off this list, know that it will now never happen after Graham favorited my "Free Brandon Graham!!" tweet during the draft last month.

Kiko Alonso vvvv   Torn ACL in offseason workouts ends his 2014 season
Sean Lee vvvv   Torn ACL in OTAs, on injured reserve, out until 2015, long term durability questions
Daryl Washington vvvv   Suspended indefinitely, to miss all of 2014, early 2015 questionable
Arthur Brown vvvv LB65 Still has long term value, but looking likely that Mosley starts and plays every down
Sean Weatherspoon vvvv   Range dropped considerably before Achilles injury, not great long term bet
Anthony Hitchens vvvv LB83 Cowboys giving Durant first shot, signed McClain, ETA may not be until 2015
Chris Borland vvvv LB81 Behind Wilhoite for now, needs big offseason to compete for starting job
Marcus Smith II <>   Could move into Matchup Rush LB tier with strong offseason
Lamin Barrow vvvv   Still questionable fit at MLB, Irving earned job in OTAs
Jerry Attaochu <>   Needs development, Chargers could have strong young pass rush combo soon
Khairi Fortt <>   Intriguing long term ILB option, quick and powerful and every-down capable
Kevin Pierre-Louis <>   Compared favorably to Telvin Smith Sr, stuck on depth chart for now
Michael Mauti <>   Vikings clearly not ready to give MLB job to Cole, may still be in mix
Brandon Graham <>   FBG!! = Free Brandon Graham!!
Avery Williamson <>   Fifth round selection, but warrants monitoring given lack of depth chart clarity in TEN
Christian Jones <>   Fell in draft due to off-field concerns, talented member of crowded CHI depth chart
Dee Ford <>   Stuck behind Houston and Hali, may follow Mingo development curve
Jarvis Jones <>   Did not have immediate impact, has chance to show development this year
Trent Murphy <>   Not sure he's more than solid college player, won't have much opportunity in 2014
Jordan Tripp <>   Longshot, but who knows what Miami is thinking given their recent LB decisions
Kevin Reddick <>   Fortt is a better bet as long term ILB answer in NO for now
Ty Powell <>   Not sure where he fits in BUF, behind Brown and Bradham in young LB pecking order

Follow and ask questions on Twitter @JeneBramel. Reading the Defense will be a regular feature this offseason with free agent commentary, draft prospect previews, tier discussion, links to our offseason IDP roundtable podcasts and much more. Subscribe to The Audible on iTunes or download our IDP podcast here.
 

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